Other Spectral Types
The spectral types you have used, OBAFGKM, were developed in the
early 20th century. In the last ten years, a new generation of
telescopes has been built. These telescopes include the Hubble Space Telescope, the giant Keck Telescopes in Hawaii, Gemini
North and Gemini South, the Very Large Telescope in Chile, and
several others. There has also been a dramatic increase in the
sensitivity of the CCD cameras used on these telescopes. These
advancements have allowed astronomers to discover new types of stars
that do not fit into any of the traditional spectral types.
Type C stars, or carbon stars, are unusually rich in carbon.
They have a beautiful, deep red color when viewed through a telescope. They
appear red because a variety of carbon compounds on their surface absorb most
of their blue light. The image below shows the spectrum of a type C star
found by SDSS.
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Click on the image to see it full size |
Type L and type T stars are cooler, smaller, and dimmer than type M
stars. They are usually very faint and difficult to find, and it's
difficult to obtain spectra from them.
Type W stars, also known as Wolf-Rayet stars, are
as hot as the type O stars, but they have strong emission lines due to
clouds of gas surrounding the star.
Type S stars are very rare. They are similar to type M stars
except with zirconium oxide and lanthanum oxide instead of titanium oxide.
Most stars you observe will have one of the traditional spectral types.
However, you may occasionally run across one of the unusual types listed
here. Every star's spectrum is unique, much like a human
fingerprint. When a star is close to the boundary between two types,
it can be difficult to classify by simply looking at the spectrum.
Exercise 8. Use the Get Spectra tool to examine
Plate 282/51658, Fiber 345. This star is a type C carbon star.
What spectral lines are present?
Try to classify the star using the traditional
OBAFGKM spectral types. Calculate its surface temperature from its peak
wavelength. Do the two ways of finding the star's temperature agree? What does
this tell you about the star?
Click
here to launch the Get Spectra tool.
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Exercise 9. Repeat Exercise 5 for
Plate 282/51658, Fiber 370. This is a sub-dwarf star. What is its spectral
type? Its temperature? |
Exercise 10.
Try to classify the
stars below. These stars have interesting spectra that are
difficult to classify. As you can see, not every star fits
neatly into our classification system! (Thanks to Amanda Bauer).
Plate |
Fiber |
293/51689 |
185 |
293/51689 |
220 |
352/51694 |
242 |
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